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HOUTHIS BLAMED FOR PORT BOTTLENECK PREVENTING AID FLOWING INTO YEMEN

▶ Yemeni president says crisis at Hodeidah is jeopardisi­ng process of reconcilia­tion

- DAMIEN MCELROY New York

Efforts to relieve the hunger and disease blighting Yemen are being hampered by a stand off over opening new ports as an alternativ­e to Hodeidah, which is controlled by the Houthi rebels, the UN General Assembly heard.

Yemeni president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi used an interview on the sidelines of the annual meeting yesterday to warn that the port of Hodeidah has become such a bottleneck that the entire reconcilia­tion process is in doubt.

A plan to hand over the port to neutral overseers has been blocked by the alliance between the Houthis and former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, Mr Hadi said.

“The legitimate government extends its hand for peace because it is responsibl­e for the Yemeni people and for lifting the suffering,” he said. “[Unfortunat­ely] the military solution is the more likely one in light of the intransige­nce of the Houthi and Saleh militias, which continue to take orders from Iran.”

Mr Hadi spoke as talks on providing humanitari­an aid to Yemen emerged as a major theme of the UN meeting.

The GCC told representa­tives that the collective contributi­on has reached US$15 billion (Dh55.1bn) in a decade.

The current UN appeal seeks to raise $2.1bn for the cholera outbreak affecting 700,000 people and widespread starvation in Yemen. Dr Abdelaziz bin Hamad Al Owaisheq, the GCC’s undersecre­tary-general for political affairs and negotiatio­ns, said the bloc had earmarked $450m for this appeal.

While some countries such as Saudi Arabia, Britain and the United States have made contributi­ons that exceeded even their own pledges, the predicamen­t over getting aid into Yemen has become more urgent.

Dr Abdullah Al Rabeeah, head of the King Salman Humanitari­an Aid and Relief Centre in Riyadh, said there were delays in offloading relief materials in Hodeidah and concerns over kickbacks to the Houthi commanders in charge of the port. While building materials and vehicles appear to pass smoothly, cargoes of food or medical supplies are informally taxed at a rate as high as $100,000 to offload a vessel, Dr Al Rabeeah said.

Saudi Arabia is pressing for the opening of alternativ­e ports and has also offered the use of its own Jizan port, located about 260 kilometres north of Hodeidah.

“This is far closer to Saada and the north [of Yemen] than Hodeidah,” Dr Al Rabeeah said. “Although we would like to see Hodeidah used to full capacity, until that happens we should use the maximum available ports, whether they are from Yemen, from Saudi Arabia, or land ports.”

US officials have expressed frustratio­n that a USAID contributi­on of four large-capacity dockside cranes for Hodeidah has not been allowed into the country to start operations. USAID made the contributi­on to the World Food Programme.

There are an estimated 15 cargo ships carrying food and fuel that have been authorised by the UN verificati­on and inspection mechanism to enter the port, but are still waiting for permission from the commanders to dock.

Even when the shipments leave port, there is a persistent problem with looting. Dr Al Rabeeah estimated that between 2015 and this year, 65 shiploads of aid and 124 relief convoys had been pillaged by the rebel forces.

Mark Lowcock, the co-ordinator of the UN’s Office for the Co-ordination of Humantiari­an Affairs, told the UN that the delays amounted to a breach of internatio­nal law and called for more pressure to change the situation.

“Too often, de facto authoritie­s in Sanaa delay or block humanitari­an assistance or the movements of humanitari­an staff, including for the cholera response,” he said.

“This is despite a clear obligation under internatio­nal law to allow unimpeded passage for humanitari­an relief. These impediment­s are unacceptab­le.”

He pointed out that Yemen imports more than 90 per cent of its staple food and nearly all its fuel and medicine.

Mr Lowcock also called for the re-opening of Sanaa airport to commercial traffic so that Yemenis could travel abroad for medical care and for salaries to be paid to government employees.

Despite the hurdles, some aid agencies, such as the Emirates Red Crescent, have been able to mount large-scale relief operations and provide education and medical care in Yemen.

Mr Hadi’s warnings about a lack of progress on the political track are widely shared.

Diplomats have pledged to intensify efforts to secure political compromise as the last key to resolving the humanitari­an problems.

 ?? Wam ?? Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation, with Antonio Guterres, the UN secretaryg­eneral, in New York
Wam Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation, with Antonio Guterres, the UN secretaryg­eneral, in New York

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